The Google News Dilemma 310
(54)T-Dub writes "Wired has an interesting article about the status of news.google.com. It has been 3 years since its release and the major bugs have long since been ironed out, so why is it still in beta? Apparently, it's because Google hasn't been able to figure out how to make money off of it. Slapping up some Google Adwords seems like the obvious solution. The problem is that Google News has multi-million-dollar news publishers scared because of the incredibly low-cost method that Google has employed to bring us 'up the minute news.' Currently they are able to scrape the content of news sites under fair use because they are not using it for commercial purposes. Once they move away from the nonprofit, educational purposes of their system they can expect to be deluged by cease and desist orders. Before you break out the tissue box though, remember that google sent their own cease and desist orders to a Google News RSS feeder a few months back."
Dilemma? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Dilemma? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Dilemma? (Score:2)
http://www.google.com/search?q=dilema [google.com]
Re:Dilemma? (Score:5, Funny)
http://news.google.com/news?q=dilema [google.com]
For more information... (Score:5, Funny)
I disagree (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I disagree (Score:3, Insightful)
LS
Re:I disagree (Score:5, Interesting)
That is the popular notion.
A news article provides facts and at least attempts to be unbiased. Opinions pieces are NOT news articles, because they contain boldly stated opinions, and they make no attempt to appear unbiased.
As you point out, any news provided by humans is somewhat biased (for what it chooses to include if nothing else), but that doesn't mean we should just throw in the towel and declare that all news is opinion.
If you're going to say that, why don't we just say that all facts are opinion. You might as well point out the potential for bias in the optic nerve. You never know what kinds of interference might occur between the eye and brain... so why believe anything?
A healthy dose of skepticism is a good thing. But to assume that all journalists have an alterior motive, is like throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
Re:I disagree (Score:5, Insightful)
And you are correct: There are no facts. Everything is subject to human interpretation (unless you are somehow one with the universe and are aware of some facts without them being filtered through your or someone elses brain first).
I understand your point that the intent of the item determines whether it is news (providing "facts" vs. explicit "opinions"). The problem is that the intent doesn't change the actual content. Watch Fox News for instance - opinion pieces are passed off as news items daily. Virtually every major news entity is backed by a large corporation which filters and adjusts its reporting to align with its interests. The viewer may see something that looks like a news report, but in fact is an ad, an opinion piece, or a suggestion that adjusts the viewer's perspective.
Even a formally journalist trained with no axe to grind (say he's writing for a time capsule) can't help to be biased - he can only report what is available to his senses and can be communicated with his language - and we all know how language contains MANY inherent biases.
LS
Re:I disagree (Score:5, Insightful)
One major bug still exists -- the bot cannot separate news from opinion and other trash. It's a sloppy orgy of miscellaneous content that should somehow be more carefully organized before being released.
Neither can CBS, FOX, CNN, NPR
Re:I disagree (Score:2)
Re:I disagree (Score:4, Interesting)
I suggest that you add the following news source:
http://www.kcna.co.jp/index-e.htm
to Google news. It is the official news service of the Democratic
Peoples Republic of Korea.
If not, I am wondering how this is different from Xinhua, another
propaganda organization of a dictorial government, whose articles are
often featured highly on Google news?
Re:I disagree (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I disagree (Score:2)
the kcna, on the other hand, is entirely a propaganda tool.
Re:I disagree (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I disagree (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I disagree (Score:3, Insightful)
Err, wait, acutally, now that I look, I can't find any (opinion) tags anywhere on Google News today, even in searches for editorials. The (press release) tags still show up but not the (opinion)s. Hmm, maybe it's considered still in beta because they're still experimenting with changing features on a daily basis?
Re:I disagree (Score:5, Insightful)
As soon as most people can separate opinion from "the news", I'll start complaining about not having a bot that can do it. Until then, news.google.com is doing pretty damn well (It's the homepage on most of the computers I use).
Re:I disagree (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I disagree (Score:2)
Kinda like Slashdot then, right? Apparently even adding a human element can't "separate news from opinion and other trash"
Hey, not trying to troll...but that's the cold truth from where I'm sittin'
This has been known on Slashdot for some time. (Score:5, Funny)
2. Drive traffic to it
3. ??
4. Profit!
Google, like the rest of the world, is still stuck on figuring out #3.
-Charles
Re:This has been known on Slashdot for some time. (Score:3, Interesting)
3. Ask the porn preview portals how they make $$$.
Re:This has been known on Slashdot for some time. (Score:2)
Re:This has been known on Slashdot for some time. (Score:4, Interesting)
2. Drive traffic to it
3. ??
4. Profit!
Google, like the rest of the world, is still stuck on figuring out #3.
Why do they have to make a profit from Google News anyway ? They make enough money with some of their other services, surely they could allow News to remain as a "loss leader" high profile mindshare venture. They do value the good will they have in the market place, moving News out of beta without changing anything from how it is now, would be a good move in that direction.
Surely "Not everything has to make money" can be reconciled with "don't be evil".
Re:This has been known on Slashdot for some time. (Score:2, Funny)
gmail content (Score:3, Funny)
Re:gmail content (Score:3, Funny)
And in other news...
Your sister just broke it off with that jerk she was dating.
And your mother's VCR didn't work on the timed record setting last night. Please let her know if any of your friends have "Trading Spouses" on tape.
Google web-scrapes the latest news (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, but one guy said something warm and fuzzy once about "do no harm" so they're a Good(tm) giant, soulless corporation, like Apple or IBM.
Oh, and thanks for GMail. ABSOLUTE GENIOUS. I was searching high and low for a way to introduce more advertisements into my e-mail, and Google delivered.
Re:Google web-scrapes the latest news (Score:2)
Oh, and don't even get me started about the ease of use. Would you like a gmail invite to try it out?
Re:Google web-scrapes the latest news (Score:2)
Re:Google web-scrapes the latest news (Score:2)
Like the submission said, they can scrape and list the original content under fair use, but they are and should be worried about the legality of syndicating it to a third party.
Re:Google web-scrapes the latest news (Score:2)
It tends to drive people to those news sites, since Google doesn't report the whole story. That's why the news sites participate: it gets eyeballs to their ads (and maybe to su
Re:Google web-scrapes the latest news (Score:2)
More advertisements? Have you seen hotmail, or any of the other free-webmail sites? I'll take a few text ads over big ad-banners. Not to mention some other nice features (Good searching, lots of space, labels, good keyboard controls). It sounds like you're just burnt out from all the gmail hype. It isn't the second coming of Christ but it is a well don
Re:Google web-scrapes the latest news (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.fastmail.fm
ad free webmail, with imap access & keyboard access
you should try looking harder
Their return is in the branding (Score:5, Insightful)
The financial return from the news portion doesn't have to come in dollars. It can simply come from "good will" and "brand value." Those are items that show up on the balance sheet too.
[rumor]Perhaps google will buy out a news entity in the future[/started]
None of that shows up on a balance sheet (Score:5, Informative)
Good Will on a Balance Sheet is the "excess" paid for a company when the acquisition is accounted for using the Purchase Method (the only one now allowed). You take all the acquired company's assets, price them to "fair market value" and make them assets on your book, then whatever premium you paid is "good will." You used to have to amortize Good Will over 40 years (because it isn't real), but now you get to keep it as "brand value" or whatever, and if it ever becomes worth less, you can write it down then.
HOWEVER, developing your own brand value, you can't put that on the balance sheet because how would you value it? Do you think that Google can just say, hmm, Google News is really cool, let's add another $10m this quarter to the good will account. Lookie here, $10m in revenue because we increased this asset?
Before stating that things show up somewhere in financials and give armchair advice, you might want to research what they are.
Good Will on a balance sheet is VERY DIFFERENT from what Good Will is in conventional thought.
Alex
Re:None of that shows up on a balance sheet (Score:3, Insightful)
Look at what most commercials are selling nowadays, how often is the commercial actually on the product? Heck you see computer commercials that are based more on the company image than the computer! People are becoming more and more suspicious of corporations and that affects the bottom line, heck if Microsoft
Fair enough, you win! :) (Score:2)
What he was advocating was essentially capitalizing an expense, which wouldn't be revnues, but would decrease expenses, which would hit the income statement, and the amortized amount would be less than 1m.
Yes I enjoy nitpicking...
The point remains, his comment just showed a lack of understanding, MAJORLY.
Do things like that generate good will for Google, absolutely.
Do they hit the financials as he was stating? Absolutely not.
The po
Re:Their return is in the branding (Score:2, Informative)
(I do a little SFAS 141/142 work and know a couple things about this.)
Not exactly. Goodwill only shows up on the balance sheet as the excess over book value you paid for another company in an acquisition. "Brand value" is just a subset of that. Your own company's goodwill is inherently reflected on the *income statement*, to the extent that you are generating earnings.
If another company came
Re:Their return is in the branding (Score:3, Informative)
IMHO I'm *glad* the guys at Google haven't taken it out of beta yet. It shows they've learned from the stupidity of the dotcom bubble, and are unwilling to threaten the rest of their organization until each and every project can stand on its own.
And before you start yelling about how much money Google may or may not have, the sent
Re:Their return is in the branding (Score:2)
[rumor]Perhaps google will buy out a news entity in the future[/started]
My guess would be that, if Google bought a news entity, all the other news sources wouldn't have much trouble getting Google News killed. I think the chance of them doing that is very low, but simply because they don't have an interest in providing content.
From Google's Ten Principles: Google does search. Google does not do horoscopes, financial advice or chat. With the largest research group in the world focused exclusively on so
Still in beta because... (Score:4, Insightful)
Now that I reread this, it's gonna get modded down... oh well.
Re:Still in beta because... (Score:2)
I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many people want more editorial! The concept of balanced news is fairly new. The press used to be a political tool used by both sides of any issue. Many people, including myself, would like to see that happen again. Editorial is the closest thing to it right now. And often times its the only interesting thing to read.
Most news stories are duplicates of each other. You hear
that's not necessarily a problem (Score:3, Insightful)
google news? (Score:2, Funny)
Could they... (Score:4, Interesting)
AdWords may not be good enough (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the real problem with GN, is that context sensitive advertising does not work for news. I've been running AdSense ads on memigo.com for a while now and Google never managed to keep up: by the time they spidered the site, the content had changed. Now, let's assume that they can solve this problem since GN is their own site, and they can update immediately: which advertisers are going to rely on context ads for news items? Imagine a story popping up on the US feed about say a Ford Explorer flipping over, with nice big Ford ads next to it: a waste of money and space. And if you try to go the other way, showing ads only for positive pieces of news (hard, but let's say it's doable) you'll be accused of bias and selling out.
So, the only reasonable choice is to sell non-context ads on GN. It could happen, but I think Google likes a challenge; they'll mine GN clicks and probably do personalized ads before they go back to plain-old ads...
Re:AdWords may not be good enough (Score:2)
Sounds like Google needs a real-time AdSense. Does anyone do real-time ad personalization? hmmm! (wheels turning inside head)
Re:AdWords may not be good enough (Score:3, Insightful)
News aggregation is the way the whole market is going. Nielson//NetRatings has shown that sites like Yahoo! News and others are now ahead of the news sites in popularity.
http://www.cyberjournalist.net/news/001562.php
I work for a company, Moreover Technologies, that has been in the online news aggregation business since 1998. As mentioned in the previous thread, the pu
Don't underestimate Google... (Score:5, Insightful)
Obviously there is a plan here, and it is very simple. Google are simply going to let the service run as beta, until it has enough users (and it is getting there) that the shoe is on the other foot: and the news providers will WANT to be screen scraped.
I mean, when news pages start seeing that 90% of their article reads are referred from news.google.com, or that do reader research and find that Google News is the number one way that people learn to read their site, then Google can start gladly removing anybody who asks. I have started reading several newssites regularly that I first found via Google News.
Still seems like a good thing (Score:5, Interesting)
So? (Score:5, Insightful)
Think about it...
1) Google isn't copying the full-text of an article. At most, its the headline and a paragraph...most of the time it is the headline and a sentence.
2) Since Google doesn't post the entire article, you have to click a link that takes you directly to the publisher of the article. Google News is therefor generating millions of direct hits per month to various news sites.
3) These millions of direct hits to these news sites means more advertising dollars for THOSE sites. Since I click link on a NYT Headline listed on Google News, I view *gasp* the NYT web site and its particular article. Which means, any ad dollars I generate there go to the NYT. The horror, the NYT is making more money thanks to Google News then without it (not to mention spreading its name out to more readers, who could purchase even subscriptions).
So am I missing something? Why would news publishers have issues with a site sending millions of hits per month at the news publisher's sites, generating far more money then if Google News didn't exist.
Re:So? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:So? (Score:2, Insightful)
Imagine if there was some service that told everyone what the best cell phone deal was at any given moment (pedantry: for your particular calling needs. just an example.) All the cell companies but one would be unhappy with it
Re:So? (Score:5, Insightful)
Rule of Humanity #1: Most people are horribly, horribly stupid.
I have an idea (Score:2)
I can relate (Score:3, Funny)
still buggy, (Score:5, Interesting)
Better still was that the aformentioned Bison's (who were on there way to there 3rd straight win) had a whopping 10 articles written about them, the Patriot Act story only had 4 articles listed. I had to take a screen cap and e-mail it out to people. It was hillarious, I guess none of the news orgs had picked up the AP story at that point.
So what. (Score:2, Interesting)
That being said, I know there's a difference between how things should be and how things are. So you don't need to explain wh
Can be a loss leader (Score:4, Insightful)
Google News is still valuable to Google, even if they cannot make money off it.
It is a free service provided for the public that give Google great publicity and a positive image. It does build their brand.
So, even if you consider it as a loss leader in marketingspeak, it is still valuable to them.
Now, as an alternate strategy, if they start providing ads for the news outlets themselves? Would the news outlets complain then?
Mo Money Google (Score:3, Funny)
At $135 per share, I'm thinking somebody has fgured out how to make money off of it
Why would the sites complain? (Score:5, Interesting)
You don't get any useful information from that excerpt. You're going to click on the link, which will take you through to the ABC News page. And that page has got ads on it! I just learned how Olay face cream can improve my complexion. So because of Google News, ABC got a page view for its advertiser that it wouldn't have gotten otherwise. The same with the other pages that Google links to.
It seems that all Google has to do is to get permission from sites to link to their stories. The ones that refuse are giving up a source of revenue. Why would any commercial site not want the most popular site in the world to link to them? Jeez, Google should be charging sites for the right to be indexed by Google News.
Re:Why would the sites complain? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, but the big boys will lose. If people go to CNN.com, all of their hits are on CNN. If they go to google news, only a small portion of their hits will be CNN. The more news sites out there, the less chance a certain page will get hit. This is only good for the smaller sites that people don't know about.
Re:Why would the sites complain? (Score:3, Interesting)
Because Google is offering an equivalent of a good that costs a lot for news services to provide, and which drives a lot of their business.
The way that people use a comprehensive news service like a newspaper, or CNN's web site, is something like this - they skim the headlines to get an idea of what the big stories are, and then they read the one or two articles that look particularly interesting. So there are two distinct types of good here - (1) the overv
Why not adwords from the news sources? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's odd because... (Score:4, Interesting)
How is that any different than displaying ads on news.google.com itself? In any case, because they are already displaying these News Results, seems to me that they are *already* profiting from Google News.
It sounds as if (Score:3, Funny)
Google lawyers never told "Don't be evil" (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Google lawyers never told "Don't be evil" (Score:2, Interesting)
But they aren't Google's headlines, they're others' headlines that Google scraped.
Beeezarre.
Only morons buy into the "do know evil" schtick. Corporations are corporations, neither good nor evil, and utterly predictable.
Google will drown the news in ads, that's the only possible way they can make money.
google could also (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyway, for an alternative to google, may I suggest to anyoneTopix [topix.net], a similar news aggregator that claims they pull from even more sources than google. I use both myself, about equally.
Topix.net (Score:4, Interesting)
Topix.net [topix.net] factors in site registration when it decide which articles to show. Given ten copies of the same/similar story it will bias the source selection to ones that do not require registration.
-AS
Alerts as SPAM (Score:3, Interesting)
On one hand, it's reassuring to know that not even google.com is whitelisted from the algorithms but, on the other, it's really annoying to need to mark each and every one of them as 'Not spam'.
inversion of control (Score:3, Insightful)
Small/niche/local sites can subscribe and get more traffic thrown their way. Big news sites may eventually follow.
FROOGLE TOO?? (Score:2, Insightful)
I noticed Froogle has been in "beta" for almost as long... yet I use is extensively and find it works better than most all the other price comparison engines.
Dang... I wish everyone had betas so good they were basically production quality. ;)
Read the Google Blog about Google News (Score:2)
old news (Score:2)
Advertising Dollars (Score:2)
For decades, multi-billion dollar companies have thrown millions of dollars at advertising agencies in order to promote their products.
In this cut-throat business (which is fundamentally based on deception in order to make more money) the advertisers threw cash liberally. Now, people seem to be rejecting advertising and have the ability to pick and choose via the internet.
Where does advertising go from here?
Who told you they don't make money from that...? (Score:5, Insightful)
--
Try Nuggets [mynuggets.net], the mobile search engine. We answer your questions via SMS, across the UK.
Fair use and the *current* site (Score:4, Insightful)
Adding advertising might cause the site to push the site's whose content they are linking to over the edge, but I don't really see how one can even argue that there's a fundamental difference.
Likewise, there's not a fundamental difference between Google News and the main Google search site, which _does_ have paid advertising.
And in both cases, sites which _wouldn't_ want to be indexed seem pretty silly. If you don't want people to find your web site, okay, keep it out of the search engines. Or save your money and don't put it on the web at all. This isn't a matter of fair use doctrine -- it's common sense.
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2)
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2, Funny)
-Snake, from The Simpsons
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2, Insightful)
Additional forms of wordplay might include pattern repetition. An example might be "Lloyd's Lloses Llamas" as a headline if Lloyds of London had to settle a claim to a llama farmer.
If it's in print, it's not how it sounds, but how it looks.
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2, Interesting)
Beta ~ Betta' ~ Better
"Better not make money"
Thought this was self evident...
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2, Funny)
Face it - tech news is the field for people who really sucked at both technical writing and journalism. You're not going to find the best writers aspiring to be techno-journalists.
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2)
Probably moreso, it's the field for people who can get stories and content out fast. One of the main reasons I check Slashdot and Google News regularly but not much else is that it get the information to me fast, and for that speed I sometimes pay the price by having to parse out the bad parts.
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:3)
We're smart people - we just can't seem to find anyone with an English degree to write for us.
You just don't get it, do you? (Score:2)
Any sufficiently advanced form of humor is indistinguishable from gibberish.
(As adapted from the phrase, "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic," popularized by Arthur C. Clarke, who wrote books. Perhaps you've heard of him. The interesting bit, of course, is Clarke's implied criticism of the individual who views the science as magic. Examine this, apply it to your own comment, and report back.)
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2)
I got the bad pun in the title. It was just that: a bad pun. An example of a good pun used as a headline is "Fertile Woman Dies in Climax." (Fertile and Climax are two rural MN towns.) I got it - but didn't laugh. And note that I was responding to someone who didn't get it at all but
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2)
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2)
Bad pun? (Score:2)
bettah not make money
better not make money
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:5, Funny)
Tarzan like job at wired but miss jungle.
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:2)
"better" not make money... "beta" not make money...
yea, a bad pun. but not an error
Re:Bad Grammar...? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Google News Better Not Make Money" or else they'll be sued because it will have become commercial use, see?
Re:This Post (Score:5, Funny)
The next time my mother-in-law asks why I don't make more money, I'm going to tell her I'm in Beta.
Re:Found a better one anyway (Score:2)
Try findory.com though, your luck might improve.
correct link (Score:2)